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GEOS API¶
Background¶
What is GEOS?¶
GEOS stands for Geometry Engine - Open Source, and is a C++ library, ported from the Java Topology Suite. GEOS implements the OpenGIS Simple Features for SQL spatial predicate functions and spatial operators. GEOS, now an OSGeo project, was initially developed and maintained by Refractions Research of Victoria, Canada.
Features¶
GeoDjango implements a high-level Python wrapper for the GEOS library, its features include:
- A BSD-licensed interface to the GEOS geometry routines, implemented purely
in Python using
ctypes
. - Loosely-coupled to GeoDjango. For example,
GEOSGeometry
objects may be used outside of a Django project/application. In other words, no need to haveDJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE
set or use a database, etc. - Mutability:
GEOSGeometry
objects may be modified. - Cross-platform and tested; compatible with Windows, Linux, Solaris, and Mac OS X platforms.
Tutorial¶
This section contains a brief introduction and tutorial to using
GEOSGeometry
objects.
Creating a Geometry¶
GEOSGeometry
objects may be created in a few ways. The first is
to simply instantiate the object on some spatial input – the following
are examples of creating the same geometry from WKT, HEX, WKB, and GeoJSON:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import GEOSGeometry
>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry('POINT(5 23)') # WKT
>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry('010100000000000000000014400000000000003740') # HEX
>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry(buffer('\x01\x01\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x14@\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x007@'))
>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry('{ "type": "Point", "coordinates": [ 5.000000, 23.000000 ] }') # GeoJSON
Another option is to use the constructor for the specific geometry type
that you wish to create. For example, a Point
object may be
created by passing in the X and Y coordinates into its constructor:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point
>>> pnt = Point(5, 23)
All these constructors take the keyword argument srid
. For example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import GEOSGeometry, LineString, Point
>>> print(GEOSGeometry('POINT (0 0)', srid=4326))
SRID=4326;POINT (0.0000000000000000 0.0000000000000000)
>>> print(LineString((0, 0), (1, 1), srid=4326))
SRID=4326;LINESTRING (0.0000000000000000 0.0000000000000000, 1.0000000000000000 1.0000000000000000)
>>> print(Point(0, 0, srid=32140))
SRID=32140;POINT (0.0000000000000000 0.0000000000000000)
Finally, there is the fromfile()
factory method which returns a
GEOSGeometry
object from a file:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import fromfile
>>> pnt = fromfile('/path/to/pnt.wkt')
>>> pnt = fromfile(open('/path/to/pnt.wkt'))
Geometries are Pythonic¶
GEOSGeometry
objects are ‘Pythonic’, in other words components may
be accessed, modified, and iterated over using standard Python conventions.
For example, you can iterate over the coordinates in a Point
:
>>> pnt = Point(5, 23)
>>> [coord for coord in pnt]
[5.0, 23.0]
With any geometry object, the GEOSGeometry.coords
property
may be used to get the geometry coordinates as a Python tuple:
>>> pnt.coords
(5.0, 23.0)
You can get/set geometry components using standard Python indexing
techniques. However, what is returned depends on the geometry type
of the object. For example, indexing on a LineString
returns a coordinate tuple:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import LineString
>>> line = LineString((0, 0), (0, 50), (50, 50), (50, 0), (0, 0))
>>> line[0]
(0.0, 0.0)
>>> line[-2]
(50.0, 0.0)
Whereas indexing on a Polygon
will return the ring
(a LinearRing
object) corresponding to the index:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Polygon
>>> poly = Polygon( ((0.0, 0.0), (0.0, 50.0), (50.0, 50.0), (50.0, 0.0), (0.0, 0.0)) )
>>> poly[0]
<LinearRing object at 0x1044395b0>
>>> poly[0][-2] # second-to-last coordinate of external ring
(50.0, 0.0)
In addition, coordinates/components of the geometry may added or modified, just like a Python list:
>>> line[0] = (1.0, 1.0)
>>> line.pop()
(0.0, 0.0)
>>> line.append((1.0, 1.0))
>>> line.coords
((1.0, 1.0), (0.0, 50.0), (50.0, 50.0), (50.0, 0.0), (1.0, 1.0))
Geometry Objects¶
GEOSGeometry
¶
-
class
GEOSGeometry
(geo_input, srid=None)¶ Parameters: - geo_input – Geometry input value (string or buffer)
- srid (int) – spatial reference identifier
This is the base class for all GEOS geometry objects. It initializes on the
given geo_input
argument, and then assumes the proper geometry subclass
(e.g., GEOSGeometry('POINT(1 1)')
will create a Point
object).
The following input formats, along with their corresponding Python types, are accepted:
Format | Input Type |
---|---|
WKT / EWKT | str or unicode |
HEX / HEXEWKB | str or unicode |
WKB / EWKB | buffer |
GeoJSON | str or unicode |
Note
The new 3D/4D WKT notation with an intermediary Z or M (like
POINT Z (3, 4, 5)
) is only supported with GEOS 3.3.0 or later.
Properties¶
-
GEOSGeometry.
coords
¶
Returns the coordinates of the geometry as a tuple.
-
GEOSGeometry.
dims
¶
Returns the dimension of the geometry:
0
forPoint
s andMultiPoint
s1
forLineString
s andMultiLineString
s2
forPolygon
s andMultiPolygon
s-1
for emptyGeometryCollection
s- the maximum dimension of its elements for non-empty
GeometryCollection
s
-
GEOSGeometry.
empty
¶
Returns whether or not the set of points in the geometry is empty.
-
GEOSGeometry.
geom_type
¶
Returns a string corresponding to the type of geometry. For example:
>>> pnt = GEOSGeometry('POINT(5 23)')
>>> pnt.geom_type
'Point'
-
GEOSGeometry.
geom_typeid
¶
Returns the GEOS geometry type identification number. The following table shows the value for each geometry type:
Geometry | ID |
---|---|
Point |
0 |
LineString |
1 |
LinearRing |
2 |
Polygon |
3 |
MultiPoint |
4 |
MultiLineString |
5 |
MultiPolygon |
6 |
GeometryCollection |
7 |
-
GEOSGeometry.
num_coords
¶
Returns the number of coordinates in the geometry.
-
GEOSGeometry.
num_geom
¶
Returns the number of geometries in this geometry. In other words, will return 1 on anything but geometry collections.
-
GEOSGeometry.
hasz
¶
Returns a boolean indicating whether the geometry is three-dimensional.
-
GEOSGeometry.
ring
¶
Returns a boolean indicating whether the geometry is a LinearRing
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
simple
¶
Returns a boolean indicating whether the geometry is ‘simple’. A geometry
is simple if and only if it does not intersect itself (except at boundary
points). For example, a LineString
object is not simple if it
intersects itself. Thus, LinearRing
and Polygon
objects
are always simple because they do cannot intersect themselves, by
definition.
-
GEOSGeometry.
valid
¶
Returns a boolean indicating whether the geometry is valid.
-
GEOSGeometry.
valid_reason
¶
Returns a string describing the reason why a geometry is invalid.
-
GEOSGeometry.
srid
¶
Property that may be used to retrieve or set the SRID associated with the geometry. For example:
>>> pnt = Point(5, 23)
>>> print(pnt.srid)
None
>>> pnt.srid = 4326
>>> pnt.srid
4326
Output Properties¶
The properties in this section export the GEOSGeometry
object into
a different. This output may be in the form of a string, buffer, or even
another object.
-
GEOSGeometry.
ewkt
¶
Returns the “extended” Well-Known Text of the geometry. This representation
is specific to PostGIS and is a super set of the OGC WKT standard. [1]
Essentially the SRID is prepended to the WKT representation, for example
SRID=4326;POINT(5 23)
.
Note
The output from this property does not include the 3dm, 3dz, and 4d information that PostGIS supports in its EWKT representations.
-
GEOSGeometry.
hex
¶
Returns the WKB of this Geometry in hexadecimal form. Please note
that the SRID value is not included in this representation
because it is not a part of the OGC specification (use the
GEOSGeometry.hexewkb
property instead).
-
GEOSGeometry.
hexewkb
¶
Returns the EWKB of this Geometry in hexadecimal form. This is an extension of the WKB specification that includes the SRID value that are a part of this geometry.
-
GEOSGeometry.
json
¶
Returns the GeoJSON representation of the geometry. Note that the result is not
a complete GeoJSON structure but only the geometry
key content of a
GeoJSON structure. See also GeoJSON Serializer.
Note
Requires GDAL.
-
GEOSGeometry.
geojson
¶
Alias for GEOSGeometry.json
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
kml
¶
Returns a KML (Keyhole Markup Language) representation of the geometry. This should only be used for geometries with an SRID of 4326 (WGS84), but this restriction is not enforced.
-
GEOSGeometry.
ogr
¶
Returns an OGRGeometry
object
corresponding to the GEOS geometry.
Note
Requires GDAL.
-
GEOSGeometry.
wkb
¶
Returns the WKB (Well-Known Binary) representation of this Geometry
as a Python buffer. SRID value is not included, use the
GEOSGeometry.ewkb
property instead.
-
GEOSGeometry.
ewkb
¶
Return the EWKB representation of this Geometry as a Python buffer. This is an extension of the WKB specification that includes any SRID value that are a part of this geometry.
-
GEOSGeometry.
wkt
¶
Returns the Well-Known Text of the geometry (an OGC standard).
Spatial Predicate Methods¶
All of the following spatial predicate methods take another
GEOSGeometry
instance (other
) as a parameter, and
return a boolean.
-
GEOSGeometry.
contains
(other)¶
Returns True
if other.within(this)
returns
True
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
crosses
(other)¶
Returns True
if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two Geometries
is T*T******
(for a point and a curve,a point and an area or a line
and an area) 0********
(for two curves).
-
GEOSGeometry.
disjoint
(other)¶
Returns True
if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is FF*FF****
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
equals
(other)¶
Returns True
if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is T*F**FFF*
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
equals_exact
(other, tolerance=0)¶
Returns true if the two geometries are exactly equal, up to a
specified tolerance. The tolerance
value should be a floating
point number representing the error tolerance in the comparison, e.g.,
poly1.equals_exact(poly2, 0.001)
will compare equality to within
one thousandth of a unit.
-
GEOSGeometry.
intersects
(other)¶
Returns True
if GEOSGeometry.disjoint()
is False
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
overlaps
(other)¶
Returns true if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is T*T***T**
(for two points or two surfaces) 1*T***T**
(for two curves).
-
GEOSGeometry.
relate_pattern
(other, pattern)¶
Returns True
if the elements in the DE-9IM intersection matrix
for this geometry and the other matches the given pattern
–
a string of nine characters from the alphabet: {T
, F
, *
, 0
}.
-
GEOSGeometry.
touches
(other)¶
Returns True
if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is FT*******
, F**T*****
or F***T****
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
within
(other)¶
Returns True
if the DE-9IM intersection matrix for the two geometries
is T*F**F***
.
Topological Methods¶
-
GEOSGeometry.
buffer
(width, quadsegs=8)¶
Returns a GEOSGeometry
that represents all points whose distance
from this geometry is less than or equal to the given width
. The optional
quadsegs
keyword sets the number of segments used to approximate a
quarter circle (defaults is 8).
-
GEOSGeometry.
difference
(other)¶
Returns a GEOSGeometry
representing the points making up this
geometry that do not make up other.
-
GEOSGeometry.
interpolate
(distance)¶
-
GEOSGeometry.
interpolate_normalized
(distance)¶
Given a distance (float), returns the point (or closest point) within the
geometry (LineString
or MultiLineString
) at that distance.
The normalized version takes the distance as a float between 0 (origin) and 1
(endpoint).
Reverse of GEOSGeometry.project()
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
intersection
(other)¶
Returns a GEOSGeometry
representing the points shared by this
geometry and other.
-
GEOSGeometry.
project
(point)¶
-
GEOSGeometry.
project_normalized
(point)¶
Returns the distance (float) from the origin of the geometry
(LineString
or MultiLineString
) to the point projected on the
geometry (that is to a point of the line the closest to the given point).
The normalized version returns the distance as a float between 0 (origin) and 1
(endpoint).
Reverse of GEOSGeometry.interpolate()
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
relate
(other)¶
Returns the DE-9IM intersection matrix (a string) representing the topological relationship between this geometry and the other.
-
GEOSGeometry.
simplify
(tolerance=0.0, preserve_topology=False)¶
Returns a new GEOSGeometry
, simplified to the specified tolerance
using the Douglas-Peucker algorithm. A higher tolerance value implies
fewer points in the output. If no tolerance is provided, it defaults to 0.
By default, this function does not preserve topology. For example,
Polygon
objects can be split, be collapsed into lines, or disappear.
Polygon
holes can be created or disappear, and lines may cross.
By specifying preserve_topology=True
, the result will have the same
dimension and number of components as the input; this is significantly
slower, however.
-
GEOSGeometry.
sym_difference
(other)¶
Returns a GEOSGeometry
combining the points in this geometry
not in other, and the points in other not in this geometry.
-
GEOSGeometry.
union
(other)¶
Returns a GEOSGeometry
representing all the points in this
geometry and the other.
Topological Properties¶
-
GEOSGeometry.
boundary
¶
Returns the boundary as a newly allocated Geometry object.
-
GEOSGeometry.
centroid
¶
Returns a Point
object representing the geometric center of
the geometry. The point is not guaranteed to be on the interior
of the geometry.
-
GEOSGeometry.
convex_hull
¶
Returns the smallest Polygon
that contains all the points in
the geometry.
-
GEOSGeometry.
envelope
¶
Returns a Polygon
that represents the bounding envelope of
this geometry. Note that it can also return a Point
if the input
geometry is a point.
-
GEOSGeometry.
point_on_surface
¶
Computes and returns a Point
guaranteed to be on the interior
of this geometry.
Other Properties & Methods¶
-
GEOSGeometry.
area
¶
This property returns the area of the Geometry.
-
GEOSGeometry.
extent
¶
This property returns the extent of this geometry as a 4-tuple,
consisting of (xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax)
.
-
GEOSGeometry.
clone
()¶
This method returns a GEOSGeometry
that is a clone of the original.
-
GEOSGeometry.
distance
(geom)¶
Returns the distance between the closest points on this geometry and the given
geom
(another GEOSGeometry
object).
Note
GEOS distance calculations are linear – in other words, GEOS does not perform a spherical calculation even if the SRID specifies a geographic coordinate system.
-
GEOSGeometry.
length
¶
Returns the length of this geometry (e.g., 0 for a Point
,
the length of a LineString
, or the circumference of
a Polygon
).
-
GEOSGeometry.
prepared
¶
Returns a GEOS PreparedGeometry
for the contents of this geometry.
PreparedGeometry
objects are optimized for the contains, intersects,
covers, crosses, disjoint, overlaps, touches and within operations. Refer to
the Prepared Geometries documentation for more information.
-
GEOSGeometry.
srs
¶
Returns a SpatialReference
object
corresponding to the SRID of the geometry or None
.
Note
Requires GDAL.
-
GEOSGeometry.
transform
(ct, clone=False)¶
Transforms the geometry according to the given coordinate transformation parameter
(ct
), which may be an integer SRID, spatial reference WKT string,
a PROJ.4 string, a SpatialReference
object, or a
CoordTransform
object. By default, the geometry
is transformed in-place and nothing is returned. However if the clone
keyword
is set, then the geometry is not modified and a transformed clone of the geometry
is returned instead.
Note
Requires GDAL. Raises GEOSException
if
GDAL is not available or if the geometry’s SRID is None
or less than 0.
Point
¶
-
class
Point
(x, y, z=None, srid=None)¶ Point
objects are instantiated using arguments that represent the component coordinates of the point or with a single sequence coordinates. For example, the following are equivalent:>>> pnt = Point(5, 23) >>> pnt = Point([5, 23])
LineString
¶
-
class
LineString
(*args, **kwargs)¶ LineString
objects are instantiated using arguments that are either a sequence of coordinates orPoint
objects. For example, the following are equivalent:>>> ls = LineString((0, 0), (1, 1)) >>> ls = LineString(Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1))
In addition,
LineString
objects may also be created by passing in a single sequence of coordinate orPoint
objects:>>> ls = LineString( ((0, 0), (1, 1)) ) >>> ls = LineString( [Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1)] )
LinearRing
¶
-
class
LinearRing
(*args, **kwargs)¶ LinearRing
objects are constructed in the exact same way asLineString
objects, however the coordinates must be closed, in other words, the first coordinates must be the same as the last coordinates. For example:>>> ls = LinearRing((0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1), (0, 0))
Notice that
(0, 0)
is the first and last coordinate – if they were not equal, an error would be raised.
Polygon
¶
-
class
Polygon
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Polygon
objects may be instantiated by passing in one or more parameters that represent the rings of the polygon. The parameters must either beLinearRing
instances, or a sequence that may be used to construct aLinearRing
:>>> ext_coords = ((0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1), (1, 0), (0, 0)) >>> int_coords = ((0.4, 0.4), (0.4, 0.6), (0.6, 0.6), (0.6, 0.4), (0.4, 0.4)) >>> poly = Polygon(ext_coords, int_coords) >>> poly = Polygon(LinearRing(ext_coords), LinearRing(int_coords))
-
classmethod
from_bbox
(bbox)¶
Returns a polygon object from the given bounding-box, a 4-tuple comprising
(xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax)
.-
num_interior_rings
¶
Returns the number of interior rings in this geometry.
-
classmethod
Comparing Polygons
Note that it is possible to compare Polygon
objects directly with <
or >
, but as the comparison is made through Polygon’s
LineString
, it does not mean much (but is consistent and quick).
You can always force the comparison with the area
property:
>>> if poly_1.area > poly_2.area:
>>> pass
Geometry Collections¶
MultiPoint
¶
MultiLineString
¶
-
class
MultiLineString
(*args, **kwargs)¶ MultiLineString
objects may be instantiated by passing in one or moreLineString
objects as arguments, or a single sequence ofLineString
objects:>>> ls1 = LineString((0, 0), (1, 1)) >>> ls2 = LineString((2, 2), (3, 3)) >>> mls = MultiLineString(ls1, ls2) >>> mls = MultiLineString([ls1, ls2])
-
merged
¶
Returns a
LineString
representing the line merge of all the components in thisMultiLineString
.-
MultiPolygon
¶
-
class
MultiPolygon
(*args, **kwargs)¶ MultiPolygon
objects may be instantiated by passing one or morePolygon
objects as arguments, or a single sequence ofPolygon
objects:>>> p1 = Polygon( ((0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1), (0, 0)) ) >>> p2 = Polygon( ((1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 2), (1, 1)) ) >>> mp = MultiPolygon(p1, p2) >>> mp = MultiPolygon([p1, p2])
-
cascaded_union
¶
Returns a
Polygon
that is the union of all of the component polygons in this collection. The algorithm employed is significantly more efficient (faster) than trying to union the geometries together individually. [2]-
GeometryCollection
¶
-
class
GeometryCollection
(*args, **kwargs)¶ GeometryCollection
objects may be instantiated by passing in one or more otherGEOSGeometry
as arguments, or a single sequence ofGEOSGeometry
objects:>>> poly = Polygon( ((0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1), (0, 0)) ) >>> gc = GeometryCollection(Point(0, 0), MultiPoint(Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1)), poly) >>> gc = GeometryCollection((Point(0, 0), MultiPoint(Point(0, 0), Point(1, 1)), poly))
Prepared Geometries¶
In order to obtain a prepared geometry, just access the
GEOSGeometry.prepared
property. Once you have a
PreparedGeometry
instance its spatial predicate methods, listed below,
may be used with other GEOSGeometry
objects. An operation with a prepared
geometry can be orders of magnitude faster – the more complex the geometry
that is prepared, the larger the speedup in the operation. For more information,
please consult the GEOS wiki page on prepared geometries.
For example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, Polygon
>>> poly = Polygon.from_bbox((0, 0, 5, 5))
>>> prep_poly = poly.prepared
>>> prep_poly.contains(Point(2.5, 2.5))
True
PreparedGeometry
¶
-
class
PreparedGeometry
¶ All methods on
PreparedGeometry
take another
argument, which must be aGEOSGeometry
instance.-
contains
(other)¶
-
contains_properly
(other)¶
-
covers
(other)¶
-
crosses
(other)¶ - New in Django 1.7.
Note
GEOS 3.3 is required to use this predicate.
-
disjoint
(other)¶ - New in Django 1.7.
Note
GEOS 3.3 is required to use this predicate.
-
intersects
(other)¶
-
overlaps
(other)¶ - New in Django 1.7.
Note
GEOS 3.3 is required to use this predicate.
-
touches
(other)¶ - New in Django 1.7.
Note
GEOS 3.3 is required to use this predicate.
-
within
(other)¶ - New in Django 1.7.
Note
GEOS 3.3 is required to use this predicate.
-
Geometry Factories¶
-
fromfile
(file_h)¶ Parameters: file_h (a Python file
object or a string path to the file) – input file that contains spatial dataReturn type: a GEOSGeometry
corresponding to the spatial data in the file
Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import fromfile
>>> g = fromfile('/home/bob/geom.wkt')
-
fromstr
(string, srid=None)¶ Parameters: - string (string) – string that contains spatial data
- srid (int) – spatial reference identifier
Return type: a
GEOSGeometry
corresponding to the spatial data in the string
fromstr(string, srid)
is equivalent to GEOSGeometry(string, srid)
.
Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import fromstr
>>> pnt = fromstr('POINT(-90.5 29.5)', srid=4326)
I/O Objects¶
Reader Objects¶
The reader I/O classes simply return a GEOSGeometry
instance from the
WKB and/or WKT input given to their read(geom)
method.
-
class
WKBReader
¶
Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import WKBReader
>>> wkb_r = WKBReader()
>>> wkb_r.read('0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F')
<Point object at 0x103a88910>
-
class
WKTReader
¶
Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import WKTReader
>>> wkt_r = WKTReader()
>>> wkt_r.read('POINT(1 1)')
<Point object at 0x103a88b50>
Writer Objects¶
All writer objects have a write(geom)
method that returns either the
WKB or WKT of the given geometry. In addition, WKBWriter
objects
also have properties that may be used to change the byte order, and or
include the SRID value (in other words, EWKB).
-
class
WKBWriter
¶
WKBWriter
provides the most control over its output. By default it
returns OGC-compliant WKB when its write
method is called. However,
it has properties that allow for the creation of EWKB, a superset of the
WKB standard that includes additional information.
-
WKBWriter.
write
(geom)¶
Returns the WKB of the given geometry as a Python buffer
object.
Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1)
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> wkb_w.write(pnt)
<read-only buffer for 0x103a898f0, size -1, offset 0 at 0x103a89930>
-
WKBWriter.
write_hex
(geom)¶
Returns WKB of the geometry in hexadecimal. Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1)
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt)
'0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
-
WKBWriter.
byteorder
¶
This property may be set to change the byte-order of the geometry representation.
Byteorder Value | Description |
---|---|
0 | Big Endian (e.g., compatible with RISC systems) |
1 | Little Endian (e.g., compatible with x86 systems) |
Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1)
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt)
'0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
>>> wkb_w.byteorder = 0
'00000000013FF00000000000003FF0000000000000'
-
WKBWriter.
outdim
¶
This property may be set to change the output dimension of the geometry representation. In other words, if you have a 3D geometry then set to 3 so that the Z value is included in the WKB.
Outdim Value | Description |
---|---|
2 | The default, output 2D WKB. |
3 | Output 3D WKB. |
Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> wkb_w.outdim
2
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1, 1)
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt) # By default, no Z value included:
'0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
>>> wkb_w.outdim = 3 # Tell writer to include Z values
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt)
'0101000080000000000000F03F000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
-
WKBWriter.
srid
¶
Set this property with a boolean to indicate whether the SRID of the geometry should be included with the WKB representation. Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKBWriter
>>> wkb_w = WKBWriter()
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1, srid=4326)
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt) # By default, no SRID included:
'0101000000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
>>> wkb_w.srid = True # Tell writer to include SRID
>>> wkb_w.write_hex(pnt)
'0101000020E6100000000000000000F03F000000000000F03F'
-
class
WKTWriter
¶
-
WKTWriter.
write
(geom)¶
Returns the WKT of the given geometry. Example:
>>> from django.contrib.gis.geos import Point, WKTWriter
>>> pnt = Point(1, 1)
>>> wkt_w = WKTWriter()
>>> wkt_w.write(pnt)
'POINT (1.0000000000000000 1.0000000000000000)'
Footnotes
[1] | See PostGIS EWKB, EWKT and Canonical Forms, PostGIS documentation at Ch. 4.1.2. |
[2] | For more information, read Paul Ramsey’s blog post about (Much) Faster Unions in PostGIS 1.4 and Martin Davis’ blog post on Fast polygon merging in JTS using Cascaded Union. |
Settings¶
GEOS_LIBRARY_PATH¶
A string specifying the location of the GEOS C library. Typically,
this setting is only used if the GEOS C library is in a non-standard
location (e.g., /home/bob/lib/libgeos_c.so
).
Note
The setting must be the full path to the C shared library; in
other words you want to use libgeos_c.so
, not libgeos.so
.